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Ethical challenges and principles in integrated care

Abstract:

Introduction: Integrated care is an established approach to delivery in parts of the healthcare infrastructure, and an ideal which, it is claimed, should be realized system-wide. Its ethical weight derives from its defence of a view about how healthcare ought to operate. Although the goal of integration is laudable, it is ethically and practically complex, involving trade-offs.

Sources of data: Considerable evidence attests to widespread enthusiasm for integration, given the need to prevent harm and extend the reach of scarce resources. Equally, evidence increasingly highlights the obstacles to successfully translating this ideal into practice.

Areas of agreement: The principle that healthcare should be seamless, ensuring that patients do not come to harm through gaps in care enjoys broad agreement. There is a similar consensus that placing the patient’s perspective at the centre of decision-making is vital, since this enables identification of these gaps.

Areas of controversy: Integrating care by making it seamless entails blurring boundaries of care domains. This risks undermining the locus of responsibility for care decisions via confusion about who has ownership of specialist knowledge where domains overlap. There is a lack of consensus about how successful integration should be measured.

Growing points: More research into the relative cost-effectiveness of upstream public health investment in preventing chronic ill-health caused by modifiable lifestyle factors vs integrating care for people already ill; further research into ethical implications of integration in practice, which can be obscured by the simplicity of the fundamental normative principle guiding integration in theory.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1093/bmb/ldac030

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Psychiatry
Role:
Author



Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Journal:
British Medical Bulletin More from this journal
Volume:
146
Issue:
1
Pages:
4-18
Publication date:
2023-01-27
Acceptance date:
2022-10-21
DOI:
EISSN:
1471-8391
ISSN:
0007-1420


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1286355
Local pid:
pubs:1286355
Deposit date:
2022-10-21

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